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74TH SEASON of CONCERTS April 24, 2016 • National Gallery of Art PROGRAM
74TH SEASON OF CONCERTS april 24, 2016 • national gallery of art PROGRAM 3:30 • West Building, West Garden Court Inscape Richard Scerbo, conductor Toru Takemitsu (1930 – 1996) Rain Spell Asha Srinivasan (b. 1980) Svara-Lila John Harbison (b. 1938) Mirabai Songs It’s True, I Went to the Market All I Was Doing Was Breathing Why Mira Can’t Go Back to Her Old House Where Did You Go? The Clouds Don’t Go, Don’t Go Monica Soto-Gil, mezzo soprano Intermission Chen Yi (b. 1953) Wu Yu Praying for Rain Shifan Gong-and-Drum Toru Takemitsu Archipelago S. 2 • National Gallery of Art The Musicians Founded in 2004 by artistic director Richard Scerbo, Inscape Chamber Orchestra is pushing the boundaries of classical music in riveting performances that reach across genres and generations and transcend the confines of the traditional concert experience. With its flexible roster and unique brand of programming, this Grammy-nominated group of high-energy master musicians has quickly established itself as one of the premier performing ensembles in the Washington, DC, region and beyond. Inscape has worked with emerging American composers and has a commitment to presenting concerts featuring the music of our time. Since its inception, the group has commissioned and premiered over twenty new works. Its members regularly perform with the National, Baltimore, Philadel- phia, Virginia, Richmond, and Delaware symphonies and the Washington Opera Orchestra; they are members of the Washington service bands. Inscape’s roots can be traced to the University of Maryland School of Music, when Scerbo and other music students collaborated at the Clarice Smith Center as the Philharmonia Ensemble. -
ARSC Journal
A Discography of the Choral Symphony by J. F. Weber In previous issues of this Journal (XV:2-3; XVI:l-2), an effort was made to compile parts of a composer discography in depth rather than breadth. This one started in a similar vein with the realization that SO CDs of the Beethoven Ninth Symphony had been released (the total is now over 701). This should have been no surprise, for writers have stated that the playing time of the CD was designed to accommodate this work. After eighteen months' effort, a reasonably complete discography of the work has emerged. The wonder is that it took so long to collect a body of information (especially the full names of the vocalists) that had already been published in various places at various times. The Japanese discographers had made a good start, and some of their data would have been difficult to find otherwise, but quite a few corrections and additions have been made and some recording dates have been obtained that seem to have remained 1.Dlpublished so far. The first point to notice is that six versions of the Ninth didn't appear on the expected single CD. Bl:lhm (118) and Solti (96) exceeded the 75 minutes generally assumed (until recently) to be the maximum CD playing time, but Walter (37), Kegel (126), Mehta (127), and Thomas (130) were not so burdened and have been reissued on single CDs since the first CD release. On the other hand, the rather short Leibowitz (76), Toscanini (11), and Busch (25) versions have recently been issued with fillers. -
1 Fo U R Fr Eed Om S
Music and Libretto by Joseph C. Phillips, Jr. C. Joseph Phillips, by Libretto Music and FREEDOMS FOUR Presents Maryland Studio Opera Music’s Maryland of of School University February 14, 2020 • 7:30PM GILDENHORN RECITAL HALL at The Clarice 1 PROGRAM University of Maryland School of Music’s Maryland Opera Studio Presents FOUR FREEDOMS Music and Libretto by Joseph C. Phillips, Jr. Performed in English CAST Act I Freedom of Speech Welcome to the annual Maryland Opera Studio (MOS) New Work Reading. Thanks to MOS Commissioner 1 ................................................................ Sarah Stembel founder Leon Major, commitment to new work has always been an integral part of our Citizen 1 ..................................................................................... Erin Ridge program’s identity. I’m particularly interested in creating opportunities to foster new work ABOUT MARYLAND OPERA STUDIO Citizen 2 ...................................................................................Nora Griffin that connect composers and librettists to our singers throughout the creative process and Citizen 3 ..................................................................................... Gal Kohav that allow our audience to witness and take part in its creation. This past fall, our composer Citizen 4 ...................................................................... Christian Simmons travelled to College Park to meet the first year MOS singers at the start of the school year. Singers read libretto excerpts with our creative team -
Repertoire Performed Or Recorded Sorted by Composer Birth Year
Robbie Padilla: Repertoire Performed or Recorded Sorted by composer birth year. This list is current as of February 27, 2021. Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625) b. 1580s Voice The Silver Swan (1612) Henry Purcell (1659-1695) b. 1650s Alto Saxophone Two Boureés (trans. Sigurd Rascher) Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) b. 1680s Bassoon Sonata in E-flat Major, TWV 41:EsA1 (1728, ed. Közreadja) Bassoon/Trombone Sonata in F Minor, TWV 41:f1 (1728, ed. Robert Veyron-Lacroix) Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) Solo Prelude and Fugue in C Major, BWV 846 (1722) Prelude and Fugue in C# Major, BWV 848 (1722) Prelude and Fugue in C# Minor, BWV 849 (1722) Prelude and Fugue in D Major, BWV 850 (1722) Prelude and Fugue in E Major, BWV 854 (1722) Prelude and Fugue in F Minor, BWV 881 (1742) Viola Sonata in B Minor, BWV 1014 (1723, ed. Eric Gustafson) George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) Voice Sì, tra i ceppi from Berenice, HWV 38 (1737) Flute Sonata in E Minor, Op. 1, No. 1b, HWV 359b (1724) Benedetto Marcello (1686-1739) Oboe Concerto in D Minor, S D935 (1715, ed. Richard Lauschmann) (I. Allegro…) Euphonium/Tuba Sonata No. 2 in E Minor, Op. 1, No. 2 (1732, arr. Michael D. Blostein) Padilla Repertoire List, page 1 Johann Ernst Galliard (1687-1747) Trombone Sonata No. 1 (1733, ed. Keith Brown) Tuba Galliard Suite (arr. Michael J. Coldren) Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) b. 1730s Solo Sonata in C Major, Hob.XVI:50 (1795) Jean-Paul-Égide Martini (1741-1816) b. 1740s Voice Plaisir d’amour (1784) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) b. -
Cavalleria Rusticana Pagliacci
Pietro Mascagni - Ruggero Leoncavallo Cavalleria rusticana PIETRO MASCAGNI Òpera en un acte Llibret de Giovanni Targioni -Tozzetti i Guido Menasci Pagliacci RUGGERO LEONCAVALLO Òpera en dos actes Llibret i música de Ruggero Leoncavallo 5 - 22 de desembre Temporada 2019-2020 Temporada 1 Patronat de la Fundació del Gran Teatre del Liceu Comissió Executiva de la Fundació del Gran Teatre del Liceu President d’honor President Joaquim Torra Pla Salvador Alemany Mas President del patronat Vocals representants de la Generalitat de Catalunya Salvador Alemany Mas Mariàngela Vilallonga Vives, Francesc Vilaró Casalinas Vicepresidenta primera Vocals representants del Ministerio de Cultura y Deporte Mariàngela Vilallonga Vives Amaya de Miguel Toral, Antonio Garde Herce Vicepresident segon Vocals representants de l'Ajuntament de Barcelona Javier García Fernández Joan Subirats Humet, Marta Clarí Padrós Vicepresident tercer Vocal representant de la Diputació de Barcelona Joan Subirats Humet Joan Carles Garcia Cañizares Vicepresidenta quarta Vocals representants de la Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu Núria Marín Martínez Javier Coll Olalla, Manuel Busquet Arrufat Vocals representants de la Generalitat de Catalunya Vocals representants del Consell de Mecenatge Francesc Vilaró Casalinas, Àngels Barbarà Fondevila, Àngels Jaume Giró Ribas, Luis Herrero Borque Ponsa Roca, Pilar Fernández Bozal Secretari Vocals representants del Ministerio de Cultura y Deporte Joaquim Badia Armengol Santiago Fisas Ayxelà, Amaya de Miguel Toral, Santiago de Director general -
Ceriani Rowan University Email: [email protected]
Nineteenth-Century Music Review, 14 (2017), pp 211–242. © Cambridge University Press, 2016 doi:10.1017/S1479409816000082 First published online 8 September 2016 Romantic Nostalgia and Wagnerismo During the Age of Verismo: The Case of Alberto Franchetti* Davide Ceriani Rowan University Email: [email protected] The world premiere of Pietro Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana on 17 May 1890 immediately became a central event in Italy’s recent operatic history. As contemporary music critic and composer, Francesco D’Arcais, wrote: Maybe for the first time, at least in quite a while, learned people, the audience and the press shared the same opinion on an opera. [Composers] called upon to choose the works to be staged, among those presented for the Sonzogno [opera] competition, immediately picked Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana as one of the best; the audience awarded this composer triumphal honours, and the press 1 unanimously praised it to the heavens. D’Arcais acknowledged Mascagni’smeritsbut,inthesamearticle,alsourgedcaution in too enthusiastically festooning the work with critical laurels: the dangers of excessive adulation had already become alarmingly apparent in numerous ill-starred precedents. In the two decades prior to its premiere, several other Italian composers similarly attained outstanding critical and popular success with a single work, but were later unable to emulate their earlier achievements. Among these composers were Filippo Marchetti (Ruy Blas, 1869), Stefano Gobatti (IGoti, 1873), Arrigo Boito (with the revised version of Mefistofele, 1875), Amilcare Ponchielli (La Gioconda, 1876) and Giovanni Bottesini (Ero e Leandro, 1879). Once again, and more than a decade after Bottesini’s one-hit wonder, D’Arcais found himself wondering whether in Mascagni ‘We [Italians] have finally [found] … the legitimate successor to [our] great composers, the person 2 who will perpetuate our musical glory?’ This hoary nationalist interrogative returned in 1890 like an old-fashioned curse. -
Album Booklet
Fauré, Chausson & Satie Piano Trios Ernest Chausson (1855–1899) Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 3 1. Pas trop lent [10:03] 2. Vite [4:00] Fidelio Trio 3. Assez lent [7:15] 4. Animé [8:42] Darragh Morgan violin Adi Tal cello Gabriel Fauré (1845–1924) Mary Dullea piano Piano Trio in D minor, Op. 120 5. Allegro, ma non troppo [6:08] 6. Andanno [8:45] 7. Allegro vivo [4:46] Erik Sae (1866–1925) arr. John White 8. Prière pour le salut de mon âme from Messe des Pauvres [3:29] Le Piège de Méduse 9. Quadrille [0:44] 10. Valse [0:46] 11. Pas vite [0:38] About the Fidelio Trio: 12. Mazurka [0:26] 13. Un peu vif [0:16] ‘[...] their interpretative touch is secure, their rapport instinctive. Together 14. Polka [0:27] with their eloquence and passion, this all adds up to something special’ 15. Quadrille [0:25] Gramophone ‘[...] the Fidelio Trio plays it with such delicacy of touch and suavity of tone Total playing me [57:01] that its Frenchness and its closeness to the Ravel coupling are never in doubt’ The Strad Fauré, Chausson & Sae: Piano Trios Chausson’s file that ‘aer failing to gain admission to the Prix de Rome compeon, Ernest Chausson (1855–1899) came from he wanted to have nothing more to do with an affluent family and following the wishes the Conservatoire. Very intelligent and of his parents, he inially studied law and independent.’ Disappointed by the result qualified as a barrister in 1877. But this was but even more resolved to create his first not the career he wanted: Chausson’s major work, Chausson le Paris to spend inclinaons were arsc rather than legal the summer in Switzerland. -
Delores Ziegler Program Spring 2010
T He d eparTmenT of m uSic at Salisbury university presents The House of Tomorrow Sunday april 25, 2010 Holloway Hall, Great Hall, 4 p.m. deloreS ZieGler, meZZo-Soprano JoHn Greer, piano Guest Appearance: John Wesley Wright, Tenor PROGRAM On Children and Childhood on children (from The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran) John Greer children’s Hour (H.W. longfellow) charles ives The more it Snows (H. fraser-Simson) H. fraser-Simson o wüsst ich doch demWeg zurück (Klaus Groth) Johannes Brahms no one is alone/childrenWill listen (from Into theWoods ) Stephen Sondheim Voices of Children The Whole duty of children (r.l. Stevenson) John Greer With nanny (from Nursery ) modest mussorgsky memories (charles ives) charles ives a. Very pleasant B. rather Sad Quelle aventure! (from La courte paille , m. carême) francis poulenc evening prayer (from Nursery ) modest mussorgsky circus Band (charles ives) charles ives Children and Sacrifice abraham and isaac, canticle ii, op. 51 Benjamin Britten — inTermiSSion — Children and Grown-Ups die ihr schwebet (from Spanisches Liederbuch , e. Geiber) HugoWolf canción de cuna para dormir un negrito (J. Valdez) Xavier montsalvatge charm (from A Charm of Lullabies , T. randolph) Benjamin Britten la reine de coeur (from La courte paille, m. carême) francis poulenc Toi, la coeur de la rose (from L’enfant et les sortilèges , colette) maurice ravel erlkönig (Goethe) franz Schubert midnight prayer (Khomyakov) John Greer Children’s Rhymes and Games Hobby Horse (from Nursery ) modest mussorgsky mausfallen Sprüchlein (e. mörike) HugoWolf Ba, be, bi, bo, bu (from La courte paille , m. carême) francis poulenc lune d’avril (from La courte paille , m. -
Historical Verism in Ruggero Leoncavallo's I Medici
Kwartalnik Młodych Muzykologów UJ no. 47 (4/2020), 139–155 DOI 10.4467/23537094KMMUJ.20.045.13918 www.ejournals.eu/kmmuj https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0122-1609 Agata Czemerys THE CHOPIN UNIVERSITY OF MUSIC THE UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW History Enchanted in Music – Historical Verism in Ruggero Leoncavallo’s I Medici Abstract My study of the historical opera I Medici focuses on an analysis of the work’s dramaturgy. In my opinion, the libretto is the key to understand- ing operatic dramas; it constitutes their primary foundation, on which the subsequent semantic layers of this naturally syncretic musical genre are constructed. In my paper I have therefore analysed the individual components of the libretto, with special emphasis on the persons of the drama, their personality traits, as well as their musical representations in Leoncavallo’s work. Analysis of the dramaturgical aspects of the opera is an essential first step to a consideration of the musical layer, which lies at the heart of my research. In my paper, I have followed the path mapped out by musicologist Luca Zoppelli; however, his work is only the starting point for a more detailed study of the opera’s expressive qualities and the procedures applied for the musical representation of veristic ideas. Verity – not only in the historical sense – becomes a leading category which unifies 139 Kwartalnik Młodych Muzykologów UJ, No. 47 (4/2020) the opera at every level, from its original source recorded in the chronicles to the composer’s presentation of the story. Keywords Ruggero Leoncavallo, -
Baroque 1590-1750 Classical 1750-1820
Period Year Opera Composer Notes A pastoral drama featuring a Dafne new style of sung dialogue, 1597 Jacopo Peri more expressive than speech but less melodious than song The first opera to survive 1600 Euridice Jacopo Peri in tact The earliest opera still 1607 Orfeo Claudio Monteverdi performed today Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria Claudio Monteverdi 1639 (The Return of Ulysses) L’incoronazione di Poppea 1643 (The Coronation of Poppea) Claudio Monteverdi 1647 Ofeo Luigi Rossi 1649 Giasone Francesco Cavalli 1651 La Calisto Francesco Cavalli 1674 Alceste Jean-Baptiste Lully 1676 Atys Jean-Baptiste Lully Venus and Adonis John Blow Considered the first English 1683 opera 1686 Armide Jean-Baptiste Lully 1689 Dido and Aeneas Henry Purcell Baroque 1590-1750 1700 L’Eraclea Alessandro Scarlatti 1710 Agrippina George Frederick Handel 1711 Rinaldo George Frederick Handel 1721 Griselda Alesandro Scarlatti 1724 Giulio Cesere George Frederick Handel 1728 The Beggar’s Opera John Gay 1731 Acis and Galatea George Frederick Handel La serva padrona 1733 (The Servant Turned Giovanni Battista Pergolesi Mistress) 1737 Castor and Pollux Jean-Philippe Rameau 1744 Semele George Frederick Handel 1745 Platee Jean-Philippe Rameau La buona figliuola 1760 (The Good-natured Girl) Niccolò Piccinni 1762 Orfeo ed Euridice Christoph Willibald Gluck 1768 Bastien und Bastienne Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mozart’s first opera Il mondo della luna 1777 (The World on the Moon) Joseph Haydn 1779 Iphigénie en Tauride Christoph Willibald Gluck 1781 Idomeneo Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mozart’s -
Operas Performed in New York City in 2013 (Compiled by Mark Schubin)
Operas Performed in New York City in 2013 (compiled by Mark Schubin) What is not included in this list: There are three obvious categories: anything not performed in 2013, anything not within the confines of New York City, and anything not involving singing. Empire Opera was supposed to perform Montemezzi’s L'amore dei tre re in November; it was postponed to January, so it’s not on the list. Similarly, even though Bard, Caramoor, and Peak Performances provide bus service from midtown Manhattan to their operas, even though the New York City press treats the excellent but four-hours-away-by-car Glimmerglass Festival like a local company, and even though it’s faster to get from midtown Manhattan to some performances on Long Island or in New Jersey or Westchester than to, say, Queens College, those out-of-city productions are not included on the main list (just for reference, I put Bard, Caramoor, and Peak Performances in an appendix). And, although the Parterre Box New York Opera Calendar (which includes some non-opera events) listed A Rite, a music-theatrical dance piece performed at the BAM Opera House, I didn’t because no performer in it sang. I did not include anything that wasn’t a local in-person performance. The cinema transmissions from the Met, Covent Garden, La Scala, etc., are not included (nor is the movie Metallica: Through the Never, which Owen Gleiberman in Entertainment Weekly called a “grand 3-D opera”). I did not include anything that wasn’t open to the public, so the Met’s workshop of Scott Wheeler’s The Sorrows of Frederick is not on the list. -
1 a Riod a N Te
1 University of Maryland School of Music’s Maryland Opera Studio Presents ARIODANTE Music by George Frideric Handel Libretto by Antonio Salvi KAY THEATRE at The Clarice November 21 - 25, 2019 November PROGRAM University of Maryland School of Music’s Maryland Opera Studio Presents ARIODANTE Music by George Frideric Handel Libretto by Antonio Salvi Performed in Italian, with English Supertitles ABOUT MARYLAND OPERA CAST Ariodante ................................... Esther Atkinson (Nov 22, 25), Jazmine Olwalia (Nov 21, 24) MARYLAND OPERA STUDIO King of Scotland ......................................Jack French (Nov 21, 24), Jeremy Harr (Nov 22, 25) Craig Kier, Director of Maryland Opera Studio Ginevra .............................................. Judy Chirino (Nov 22, 25), Erica Ferguson (Nov 21, 24) Amanda Consol, Director of Acting Justina Lee, Principal Coach | Ashley Pollard, Manager Lurcanio...............................................Charles Calotta (Nov 21, 24) Mike Hogue (Nov 22, 25) Polinesso ..........................................................................................................Jesse Mashburn Dalinda ..........................Michele Currenti (Nov 22, 25), Joanna Zorack-Greene (Nov 21, 24) Odoardo .............................................Charles Calotta (Nov 22, 25), Mike Hogue (Nov 21, 24) ABOUT THE MARYLAND OPERA STUDIO’S CHORUS FALL OPERA PRODUCTION Abigail Beerwart, Andy Boggs, Amanda Densmoor, Henrique Carvalho, Maryland Opera Studio (MOS) singers perform in two fully staged operas. The first of these,